A purchase order, often abbreviated to PO, is a commercial document issued by a buyer to a seller, indicating types, quantities, and agreed prices for products or services required.[1] It is used to control the purchasing of products and services from external suppliers.[2] Purchase orders can be an essential part of enterprise resource planning system orders.

An example of a purchase order request from a travel agent.

An indent is a purchase order often placed through an agent (indent agent) under specified conditions of sale.[3]

The issue of a purchase order does not itself form a contract. If no prior contract exists, then it is the acceptance of the order by the seller that forms a contract between the buyer and seller.

Overview

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Purchase orders allow buyers to clearly and openly communicate with the sellers to maintain transparency. They may also help a purchasing agent to manage incoming orders and pending orders. Sellers are also protected by the use of purchase orders, in case of a buyer's refusal to pay for goods or services.[4]

Purchase orders provide benefits in that they streamline the purchasing process in a standard procedure. Commercial lenders or financial institutions may provide financial assistance on the basis of purchase orders.[4] There are various trade finance facilities that almost every financial institution allows business people to use against purchase orders such as:

  1. Before shipment credit facility
  2. Post shipment credit facility
  3. Trade finance facility
  4. Foreign bill purchase credit facility
  5. Bill retirement credit facility
  6. Order confirmation
  7. Followup

The purpose of purchase orders is to procure materials for direct consumption or for stock, procure services, fulfil customer requirements using external resources, or procure a material that is required in production from an internal source (long-distance intra-plant stock transfers). They may also place once-only procurement transactions and optimize purchasing by taking full advantage of negotiated conditions or for optimal utilisation of existing resource capacities.[4]

Creating a purchase order is typically the first step of the purchase-to-pay process in an ERP system. Purchase orders may require a SKU code.

Many organisations encourage staff to use a purchasing card (or procurement card) for low value purchases instead of issuing a purchase order.[5]

Future business scenarios anticipate a reduced role for purchase orders or even their full elimination, leaving organizations with a smaller and more strategic procurement function than in the past. Kai Nowosel and Kris Timmermans of consultants Accenture ask why purchase orders and invoices are needed when digital systems can deliver goods confirmations and authorize funds, and suggest that digital functionality and supply analytics will change the landscape for purchase orders and processes "in the coming years".[6]

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Although a typical purchase order may not be worded as a contract (in fact most contain little more than a list of the goods or services the buyer desires to purchase, along with price, payment terms, and shipping instructions), the purchase order is a specially regarded instrument regulated by the Uniform Commercial Code or other similar law which establishes a purchase order as a contract by its nature. Yet despite the nature of the purchase order as a contract, it is common to accompany the acceptance of a purchase order with a legal document such as the terms and conditions of sale, which establish specific or additional legal conditions of the contract.[7]

The US Federal Acquisition Regulation states that purchase orders should generally be issued on a fixed-price basis, but provision is also made for unpriced purchase orders to be issued where "it is impractical to obtain pricing in advance of issuance of the purchase order".[8]

In the UK, the Office of Government Commerce noted with concern in 2010 that "contracting authorities [were] not always raising purchase orders", and that where they were used, invoices were not always being reconciled to purchase orders before payment.[9] Some organisations operate a "No PO, no pay" policy, which means that invoices which do not refer to a purchase order number will be returned to the supplier unpaid. The City of London Corporation, for example, operates such a policy.[10]

Formats

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Electronic

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Many purchase orders are no longer paper-based, but rather transmitted electronically over the Internet. It is common for electronic purchase orders to be used to buy goods or services of any type online.

There are many names for Electronic Purchase Orders. It is sometimes known as: E-Procurement, E-Purchasing, E-Purchase Requisition. These terms are normally all referring to Electronic Purchase Orders.

Non-electronic

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The record of purchase order in most business firms are still [when?] on paper and thus there is a need for proper purchase order format. Many users wish to have professional formatting for purchase orders for several reasons. A company may wish to have a strong understanding of purchase transactions or to know the basic requirements of purchase order. It may also make it part of business documentation, which makes the process easier while keeping record of all transactions and to have good impression on the client or customer.[11]

Planned purchase order

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The term "planned purchase order" (PPO) is used to refer to a buyer's commitment to purchase goods or services from a single supplier on a long term basis, with individual purchase orders specifying the quantities required from time to time.[12][13]

Purchase order request

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A purchase order request or purchase requisition is a request sent internally within a company to obtain purchased goods and services, including stock. The request is a document which tells the purchasing department or manager exactly what items and services are requested, the quantity, source and associated costs.

A Purchase Requisition Form (PRF) is filled out prior to purchasing goods as a form of tangible authorisation. Purchase request forms are often used in smaller business who do not have a computer-based system. However, many computer (included web-based solution) systems are available on the market that can facilitate the capture of purchase request information. Purchase order requests can also be passed to the purchasing department via a management information system.

A PRF may contain budget and purchase values to make the individual aware of the annual and remaining budget before a purchase is made. Such a system is there to guarantee that goods and services are purchased with the consent of the line manager and that a sufficient budget is available.

Purchase Order Finance (or PO Finance)

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[edit source] The term "purchase order finance" (PO finance) is used to refer to a type of financing that helps buyers to receive financing help from another entity to prepay the cost of goods (and sometimes services). This takes the form of a loan or purchase agreement that can be with or without recourse, depending upon the structure of the deal. There are very few purchase order finance companies, as the market is small, niche, and rarely advertise. Oftentimes, PO finance companies will work alongside factoring or accounts receivables finance companies to provide a complete financing package. Factoring companies like LSQ, Riviera Funding, and Triumph, among others, work with companies like King Trade or PayMeFaster to achieve the combined package of PO financing and receivables financing (factoring). [14][15]

Many transactions are between a Client company that is selling to a large Buyer, and buying from a Supplier in Asia, South America, or Europe. An example would be that Client buys goods from Supplier at $500 per item and sells to Buyer for $600 per item. In this case, the PO finance company would help by paying for (financing) the goods from the Supplier at $500, those ship to the Client, then the Buyer. 30-60-90-120 days later, the Buyer and would pay the PO finance company at $600 per item. The PO finance company would then pay down their loan and remit the balance to Client. [16][17]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply, Glossary of Terms: Purchase Order (PO), accessed 24 May 2023
  2. ^ Dobler, Donald W; Burt, David N (1996). Purchasing and Supply Management, Text and Cases (Sixth ed.). Singapore: McGraw-Hill. p. 70.
  3. ^ "Indent". businessdictionary.com. Archived from the original on 7 August 2019. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "Purchase Order Benefits". Loyola University New Orleans. Archived from the original on 17 February 2019. Retrieved 29 August 2016.
  5. ^ Oxfordshire County Council, Purchasing and Embedded Card Policy, accessed 24 May 2023
  6. ^ Nowosel, K., Is Yours a Procurement Organization of One?, published 28 September 2015, accessed 1 September 2023
  7. ^ "Requisition Order and Purchase Order". DPO. Archived from the original on 28 August 2018. Retrieved 29 August 2016.
  8. ^ FAR - Subpart 13.3—Simplified Acquisition Methods Archived 2018-07-09 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 15 November 2016
  9. ^ Office of Government Commerce, Procurement Policy Note – The requirement for effective scrutiny of invoices before payment. Action Note 18/10 29 September 2010, archived by National Archives, accessed 28 August 2021
  10. ^ City of London Corporation, Information for Suppliers, updated on 18 September 2024, accessed on 6 December 2024
  11. ^ "Purchase Order Templates". Smartsheet.
  12. ^ Gaur, P., Purchase Order, Cargoflip, Inc., published 7 April 2023, accessed 10 August 2023
  13. ^ Istanbouli, B. et al., Combinatorial Effects in Supply Chain Processes, published in Aveiro et al. (eds.), Proceedings of the Enterprise Engineering Working Conference (EEWC) Forum 2017, Antwerp, Belgium, 09-May-2017 to 11-May-2017, accessed 10 August 2023
  14. ^ "Invoice Factoring Lenders | Recommended Invoice Factoring Companies". Funder Intel. Retrieved 2024-11-11.
  15. ^ "Best Factoring Companies Of 2024 – Forbes Advisor". www.forbes.com. Retrieved 2024-11-11.
  16. ^ Kouvelis, Panos; Dong, Lingxiu; Turcic, Danko, eds. (2017). Supply chain finance. Foundations and trends in technology, information and operations management. Boston: now. ISBN 978-1-68083-376-8.
  17. ^ Chhabra, Chhabra (2021). "SUPPLY CHAIN FINANCE BY DEVELOPMENT BANKS AND PUBLIC ENTITIES" (PDF). The World Bank.